Mother's Day
Mother’s Day is fast approaching. When I spoke with my sister this
week she asked if we had special plans. The truth is no, since I am
usually the planner of most things around our house it would be up to me
to plan Mother’s Day.
If I did plan the day, it would consist of a drive and stops at
various garden centers and shops and bookstores along the beautiful
Connecticut River Valley. Three kids on such an adventure does not spell relaxation. It rather
sets up all three for a day of complaining which would in turn make me
wonder what had ever taken hold of me enough to have these kids in the
first place. So my response was, ”nothing special.”
When my mother passed away six years ago, it took some of the steam
out of Mother’s Day. There are times during the year her loss is felt
more acutely and Mother's Day is one of them. After my mother had
died, my cousin had described her father's death feeling like a hole
left in her heart that gets smaller but never completely goes away. I
understood exactly what she meant and on Mother's Day that hole
expands.
My mother was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis before I was born. It
was a fact in our house and nothing I had to adjust myself to. For my
mother, I am sure it was much more than that. I am sure her life at
times seemed daunting, that as a mother she wasn't quite living up to
the expectation.
But as her daughter, my mother was just who she was, nothing more,
nothing less. In the fourth grade, my sister, my mother and I were at my
school for a parent/ teacher night. We walked down the hall, my sister
pushing my mother’s wheelchair and I was walking along beside her,
holding the arm rest of her chair. We passed one of my classmates.
He slowed down, smiled at me and kept walking, glancing back once as
if he wasn’t sure if he was seeing straight. The next day he approached
me and said, "Your mom can’t walk?” And I answered as any
self-respecting fourth-grader would, "yeah, so?”
This encounter did not change how I saw my mother but it did make me
realize that others saw her differently. That perhaps others felt sorry
for her or our family. But those who knew her best did not waste their
time on pity.
My mother was kind and organized, sweet and stern and she seemed to
have a special part of her brain made out of a reinforced steel just for
remembering things. She could recall phone numbers, dates and what I
had said on the phone three years earlier to a friend about a cute guy
who happened to — three years later — call me; and two years later marry
me. I cannot remember to pick up milk without a reminder from my
3-year-old. Apparently, memory skips a generation.
My mother was gullible and fun and even as a teenager I often
preferred her company over that of my peers. It never mattered to me
that she couldn’t walk across a room, she was always present. She never
missed a concert, play, banquet, graduation, wedding or baby shower.
She always remembered birthdays and anniversaries. She was happy when
we were happy. She worried when we were not. She tried to fix what she
could and when she couldn’t she would tell us how wonderful we were and
that things would get better.
I don’t remember from one Mother’s Day to the next what I gave her. I
am sure in my early years there were homemade gifts, as my children
bestow upon me each year. And I know in kindergarten I gave her anxiety
when the gerbils I brought home from school for the weekend decided to
practice some cannibalism.
And again in seventh grade when the pet rat I brought home from
science class managed to escape his cage overnight. I am pretty sure I
gave her some gray hair when I announced I preferred to not go to
college but rather head to California like a free-loving hippie. But
like all good mothers the small moments of anxiety and trauma never
eclipsed the greater feelings of love and awe.
This year, I will love my homemade gifts and bask in the few moments
that my children sing my praises before they move on to more important
things like video games and fighting with one another. I will be
thankful for the beautiful women in my life who help me steer the
obstacle ridden pathway of motherhood.
I will remember my own mother who promised she would never leave me
because she knew she would always be near in my children's laughter and
my sister’s smile and my father's hug. I will know what a blessing
motherhood is and what really matters is not what you offer physically
but what you offer from your spirit.
Because that will travel with our children forever
No comments:
Post a Comment